The United States government has given $4 million in additional aid for survivors of Typhoon “Pablo,” according to a top official of an international relief agency.
Stephen Anderson, World Food Programme
(WFP) director for the Philippines, said the additional funds from the United
States Agency for International Aid (USAID) would benefit at least
170,000 more people in the next two months. Anderson said the latest funding
assistance from USAID would allow WFP to purchase 3.4 million kilograms of rice
to feed at least 170,000 people for two months. Gloria Steele, USAID Philippine mission
director, turned over the funding to WFP.
“The additional support will help
thousands of affected families recover from the impact of the disaster and
enable them to rebuild their lives,” said Anderson in a press conference here.
He said WFP has also received the first
installment of a P50-million funding aid that allowed WFP to “roll out
cash-for-work activities” like debris clearing and livelihood support in Davao
Oriental, Compostela Valley and the Caraga region.
The International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine National Red Cross (PNRC) said they are also
continuing efforts to help the typhoon survivors in Southern Mindanao. Aside from distributing food, the ICRC and
PNRC said they are also focusing on providing clean water, shelter, health care
and other needs of people in areas devastated by Typhoon Pablo.
In Baganga, Davao Oriental, the ICRC and
PNRC have put up a field clinic as government- operated health facilities there are still
not in operation. “Most of the health facilities in Baganga
were either damaged or totally destroyed,” said Dr. Gundula Epp-Graak, who works
at the newly established Red Cross Basic Health-care Unit in Baganga.
In his press conference, Anderson admitted
that challenges are confronting relief distribution in typhoon-hit areas. “For the past weeks, the relief operations
drew complaints that some affected areas were not reached and affected families
have not been served,” he said. Anderson admitted that “there might be
some gaps in the relief operation system,” which led to fewer relief goods for
some survivors than others. This, he said, is a real challenge that
relief workers should be able to overcome through a consolidated and united
effort.
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